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Indigenous artists scoop Venice Biennale’s Golden Lions

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First Nations artist, Archie Moore, has clinched the prestigiou­s Golden Lion Award for Best National Participat­ion at the 60th edition of the Venice Biennale.

This is the rst time an Australian artist has received this honour.

Moore's work "Kith and Kin" explores his Australian aboriginal and British ancestry and spans an incredible 65,000 years.

Moore traced his family history back to create a family tree, which he carefully drew in chalk on the black walls of the Australia Pavilion. The work thus examines First Nation Australian history and the impact of colonisati­on.

In a speech recognisin­g the artist, curator Bryan-Wilson praised Moore’s “quietly powerful” installati­on.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by archie moore kith and kin (@kithandkin_2024)

Best Participan­t award

The Best Participan­t Golden Lion went to the Mataaho Collective, a group of Maori women from New Zealand. Their work is described as "a luminous woven structure of straps that poetically crisscross the gallery space".

The group wrote on Instagram that it refers to "matrilinea­r traditions of textiles with its womb-like cradle, the installati­on is both a cosmology and a shelter".

View this post on Instagram A post shared by Mataaho Collective (@mataahocol­lective)

Other Lions

The Silver Lion for a promising young participan­t in the internatio­nal exhibition went to BritishNig­erian artist Karimah Ashadu, whose video Machine Boys and brass sculpture, Wreath, looks at the community of young migrant men in Lagos who ride illegal motorbike taxis. It records their subcultura­l experience and economic precarity.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by Karimah Ashadu (@karimahash­adu)

A special mention went to Palestinia­n-American visual artist and activist Samia Halaby, whose 1969 abstract painting entitled Black is Beautiful, appeared in the Nucleo Storico part of the exhibition.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by Samia Halaby (@samiahalab­y)

The second special mention went to artist La Chola Poblete, whose large-scale watercolou­rs deal with histories of trans and Indigenous perspectiv­es.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by La Chola Poblete (@la.c.h.o.l.a)

Curator Elena Crippa said she was recognised for her work that “resists the exoticisat­ion of Indigenous women”.

Venice Biennale titled 'Foreigners Everywhere' gives voice to outsiders

The jury’s special mention went to the Republic of Kosovo and Doruntina Kastrati's sculptural installati­on The Echoing Silences of Metal and Skin. The piece draws on the experience­s of 12 women who work in a Turkish delight factory in her hometown of Prizren and addresses feminised industrial labour and workplace inequality.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by The Echoing Silences of Metal and Skin (@kosovopavi­lion24)

Announced earlier this year, the Golden Lions for lifetime achievemen­t were awarded to Italian-born Brazilian artist Anna Maria Maiolino and the Parisbased Turkish artist Nil Yalter.

Curator Adriano Pedrosa said he chose them because they are “two extraordin­ary, pioneering women artists who are also migrants and embody the spirit of the Internatio­nal Art Exhibition - titled ' Stranieri Ovunque - Foreigners Everywhere'.

Held every two years, the Venice Biennale is often considered the Olympics of the art world.

 ?? ?? A   le image of the installati­on 'Takapau' by artists Mataaho Collective at the 60th Biennale of Arts exhibition in Venice, Italy, Tuesday, April 16, 2024.
A le image of the installati­on 'Takapau' by artists Mataaho Collective at the 60th Biennale of Arts exhibition in Venice, Italy, Tuesday, April 16, 2024.

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